
Just when we thought the PGA Tour's biggest headaches were behind them, another shockwave hits: Scottie Scheffler, our current World Number One and the machine currently dominating the golf business, is taking a break. He will skip the Truist Championship in two weeks, causing real schedule chaos for the Tour.
No wonder the alarm bells are ringing. Scheffler, just 29 years old, already has 20 PGA Tour wins under his belt, including four Majors. The guy is simply in a league of his own and the most consistent golfer on the planet. If he's not teeing it up, the tournament loses a huge draw, and that's precisely at a critical phase.
Mega Schedule, Mega Headaches
The situation is tense, as the PGA Tour is currently operating at a breakneck pace. Six tournaments are lined up consecutively, starting next week with the Cadillac Championship. Among them are three Signature Events and a Major – precisely the events Scheffler gives his all for. And as if that weren't enough: Rory McIlroy, the other superstar, hasn't even confirmed his participation for the Cadillac Championship yet. That's a real problem for the Tour, which needs to get its top stars on the tee.
The Tour's Golfer Dilemma
Insiders like Golf.com journalist Sean Zak are openly stating it: The PGA Tour has a serious structural problem. Three Signature Events between The Masters and the PGA Championship? And at NONE of these events are the two biggest draws, Scottie and Rory, competing together in the field! That naturally makes things less attractive for fans and sponsors. Scheffler is even considering skipping the Charles Schwab Challenge to avoid playing four consecutive weeks. The Tour needs to ask itself if its schedule is truly sustainable, or if it's actually burning out its stars.


